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1.
PLoS Biol ; 21(4): e3002086, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37098044

ABSTRACT

Rodents can learn from exposure to rewarding odors to make better and quicker decisions. The piriform cortex is thought to be important for learning complex odor associations; however, it is not understood exactly how it learns to remember discriminations between many, sometimes overlapping, odor mixtures. We investigated how odor mixtures are represented in the posterior piriform cortex (pPC) of mice while they learn to discriminate a unique target odor mixture against hundreds of nontarget mixtures. We find that a significant proportion of pPC neurons discriminate between the target and all other nontarget odor mixtures. Neurons that prefer the target odor mixture tend to respond with brief increases in firing rate at odor onset compared to other neurons, which exhibit sustained and/or decreased firing. We allowed mice to continue training after they had reached high levels of performance and find that pPC neurons become more selective for target odor mixtures as well as for randomly chosen repeated nontarget odor mixtures that mice did not have to discriminate from other nontargets. These single unit changes during overtraining are accompanied by better categorization decoding at the population level, even though behavioral metrics of mice such as reward rate and latency to respond do not change. However, when difficult ambiguous trial types are introduced, the robustness of the target selectivity is correlated with better performance on the difficult trials. Taken together, these data reveal pPC as a dynamic and robust system that can optimize for both current and possible future task demands at once.


Subject(s)
Odorants , Piriform Cortex , Mice , Animals , Piriform Cortex/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Smell/physiology , Olfactory Pathways/physiology
2.
Neuron ; 110(11): 1829-1842.e5, 2022 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35381188

ABSTRACT

The hippocampus is implicated in memory formation, and neurons in the hippocampus take part in replay sequences that have been proposed to reflect memory of explored space. By recording from large ensembles of hippocampal neurons as rats explored various tracks, we show that sustained replay appears after a single experience. Further, we found that with repeated experience in a novel environment, replay slows down, taking more time to traverse the same trajectory. This effect was dependent on experience, not passage of time, and was environment specific. By investigating the slow-gamma (25-50 Hz) hover-and-jump dynamics within replays, we show that replay slows by adding more hover locations, increasing the resolution of the behavioral trajectory. We provide evidence that inhibition and cortical engagement both increase as replay slows. Thus, replays can reflect single experiences and evolve with re-exposure, in a manner consistent with the encoding of greater detail into replay memories with experience.


Subject(s)
Hippocampus , Neurons , Animals , Hippocampus/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Rats
3.
J Neurosci ; 2021 May 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34035138

ABSTRACT

Diverse functions such as decision-making and memory consolidation may depend upon communication between neurons in hippocampus (HP) and prefrontal cortex (PFC). HP replay is a candidate mechanism to facilitate this communication, however details remain largely unknown due to the technical challenges of recording sufficient numbers of HP neurons for replay while also recording PFC neurons. Here we implanted male rats with 40-tetrode drives, split between HP and PFC, during learning of a Y-maze spatial memory task. Surprisingly, we found that in contrast to their non-selectivity for maze arm during movement, a portion of PFC neurons were highly selective for HP replay of different arms. Moreover, PFC neurons' selectivity to HP non-local arm representation during running tended to match their replay arm selectivity and was predictive of future choice. Thus, PFC activity that is tuned to HP activity is best explained by non-local HP position representations rather than HP representation of actual position, providing a new potential mechanism of HP-PFC coordination during HP replay.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTThe hippocampus is implicated in spatial learning while the prefrontal cortex is implicated in decision-making. The question of how the two areas interact has been of great interest. A specific activity type in hippocampus called replay is particularly interesting because it resembles internal exploration of non-local experiences, but is technically challenging to study, requiring recordings from large numbers of hippocampus neurons simultaneously. Here we combined replay recordings from hippocampus with prefrontal recordings, to reveal a surprising degree of selectivity for replay, and a pattern of coordination that supports some conceptions of hippocampocortical interaction and challenges others.

4.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 15325, 2017 11 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29127388

ABSTRACT

Reactivation of representations corresponding to recent experience is thought to be a critical mechanism supporting long-term memory stabilization. Targeted memory reactivation, or the re-exposure of recently learned cues, seeks to induce reactivation and has been shown to benefit later memory when it takes place during sleep. However, despite recent evidence for endogenous reactivation during post-encoding awake periods, less work has addressed whether awake targeted memory reactivation modulates memory. Here, we found that brief (50 ms) visual stimulus re-exposure during a repetitive foil task enhanced the stability of cued versus uncued associations in memory. The extent of external or task-oriented attention prior to re-exposure was inversely related to cueing benefits, suggesting that an internally-orientated state may be most permissible to reactivation. Critically, cueing-related memory benefits were greatest in participants without explicit recognition of cued items and remained reliable when only considering associations not recognized as cued, suggesting that explicit cue-triggered retrieval processes did not drive cueing benefits. Cueing benefits were strongest for associations and participants with the poorest initial learning. These findings expand our knowledge of the conditions under which targeted memory reactivation can benefit memory, and in doing so, support the notion that reactivation during awake time periods improves memory stabilization.


Subject(s)
Memory, Long-Term/physiology , Photic Stimulation , Wakefulness/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Sleep/physiology
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